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Thermal regime of the Costa Rican convergent margin: 1. Along‐strike variations in heat flow from probe measurements and estimated from bottom‐simulating reflectors

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Title Thermal regime of the Costa Rican convergent margin: 1. Along‐strike variations in heat flow from probe measurements and estimated from bottom‐simulating reflectors
Names Harris, Robert N. (creator)
Grevemeyer, Ingo (creator)
Ranero, César R. (creator)
Date Issued 2010-12-15 (iso8601)
Abstract The thermal structure of convergent margins provides information related to the tectonics, geodynamics,
metamorphism, and fluid flow of active plate boundaries. We report 176 heat flow measurements
made with a violin bow style probe across the Costa Rican margin at the Middle America Trench. The
probe measurements are collocated with seismic reflection lines. These seismic reflection lines show widespread
distribution of bottom‐simulating reflectors (BSRs). To extend the spatial coverage of heat flow
measurements we estimate heat flow from the depth of BSRs. Comparisons between probe measurements
and BSR‐derived estimates of heat flow are generally within 10% and improve with distance landward of
the deformation front. Together, these determinations provide new information on the thermal regime of
this margin. Consistent with previous studies, the margin associated with the northern Nicoya Peninsula
is remarkably cool. We define better the southern boundary of the cool region. The northern extent of the cool region remains poorly determined. A regional trend of decreasing heat flow landward of the
deformation front is apparent, consistent with the downward advection of heat by the subducting Cocos
Plate. High wave number variability at a scale of 5–10 km is significantly greater than the measurement
uncertainty and is greater south of the northern Nicoya Peninsula. These heat flow anomalies vary between
approximately 20 and 60 mW m−2 and are most likely due to localized fluid flow through mounds and
faults on the margin. Simple one‐dimensional models show that these anomalies are consistent with flow
rates of 7–15 mm yr−1. Across the margin toe variability is significant and likely due to fluid flow through
deformation structures associated with the frontal sedimentary prism.
Genre Article
Topic Subduction zones
Identifier Harris, R. N., I. Grevemeyer, C. R. Ranero, H. Villinger, U. Barckhausen, T. Henke, C. Mueller, and S. Neben (2010), Thermal regime of the Costa Rican convergent margin: 1. Along‐strike variations in heat flow from probe measurements and estimated from bottom‐simulating reflectors, Geochem. Geophys. Geosyst., 11, Q12S28, doi:10.1029/2010GC003272

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